The Joyful Hermit is watering the few remaining orchids and a slew of other houseplants today. Just stepped outside the garage with the blue bucket and loaded it with the quickly melting snow. Brought in the bucket, set it on the rug by the utility area, and await the snow in the bucket to melt. Plants love snow water.

Once melted and room temp, some plants in their containers, such as orchids, can be set right down in the bucket of snow water. Allow the potting medium to become saturated. Remove the pot and plant, and repeat the process. For large potted plants, simply dip a plastic cup (Joyful Hermit uses an old measuring cup with pouring lip), and water the plants in their pots by gently pouring water all around the soil and plant base.

Be innovative in types of basins placed under plant pots. Joyful counted on a clay basin only to find that the moisture did seep onto the wood flooring. Handled the slight mold but definite discoloration to the wood by moistening a paper towel with chlorine bleach water, then wiped the discolored flooring and let the sun streaming through the window complete the bleaching. The next day I over-wiped the same area with wood polishing oil…and replaced the clay basin with a plastic plant basin found in the garage.

Today I plan to add some generic plant fertilizer into the snow water. The plants being wintered over are looking as if they could use one last boost until spring–still some weeks away. Now and then I also clear away any of the dried and spent blooms and leaves. Get ready to vacuum, for it is not a neat process no matter how clever one attempts it.

For those who do not have snow to utilize for house plant watering (or in the warmer weather here), the Joyful Hermit sets out buckets and even a stainless steel pot to catch rain water. Particularly efficacious to plants (and I drink it from stainless steel pots) is water collected during a lightning storm.

The hydrogen peroxide properties in electrical storm rain water have beneficial effects. In fact, the healing, restorative waters at the miraculous apparition site in Lourdes, France, have been found to have high amounts of this (food-grade type) hydrogen peroxide. [Note: this is not the grade of hydrogen peroxide found in drugstores; do not drink that or use for watering houseplants.]

No snow, no rain? Use tap water or filtered, but don’t use soft water, obviously, for plants. The salt content is a killer. If your water ranks high in hardness, and you are truly keeping the houseplants’ little veins close to your heart, let the tap water stand in your watering container for a day before watering the plants. Find out water hardness from your city or township water provider.

Come spring, The Joyful Hermit is going to check with the local water department and hope to get a free rain barrel for garden watering this year. If they are not giving these rather basic, unattractive, white barrels for free, I will take a budget risk and invest in one I’ve researched on the internet. These barrels attach to the house downspout…and will lower what last summer’s drought heightened in budget-busting water bills.

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About The Joyful Hermit

I am a hermit, successful in living frugally yet with creativity and JOY! I provide can-do ideas for all aspects of daily life. I live the up side of being down in any situation. Learn to live each day simply and joyfully. Benefit from practical tips and creative ideas with The Joyful Hermit.

Joyful Hermit’s Daily Tip

Save Big Money...by growing dark, leafy greens such as kale, beets, Mescule, Romaine, and French Sorrel in garden pots. You can re-seed frequently, and by having the large pots placed near your dwelling, the greens will grow earlier in spring and later into the fall, being cool-weather growers by nature. Use your own fresh greens in your very own batches of Green Glory, saving shopping and getting the freshest greens possible. Try growing your own cucumbers, as well, from pots. So what if the vines tumble over and out? Vegetables grown in planters are quite beautiful! You really do save money, especially as some of the greens re-seed and also re-grow if the leaves are clipped rather than pulled by the roots.